On May 3, 2016 12:07 PM, "Tom Callaway" <tcall...@redhat.com> wrote: > > * Emulators which depend on firmware or ROM files to function may not be > included in Fedora, unless the copyright holder(s) for the firmware/ROM > files give clear permission for the firmware/ROM files to be distributed > (either under a Fedora permissible license or under the Fedora firmware > exception criteria). Note: This only covers the situation where an > emulator will not run at all without firmware/ROM files. For example, > emulators that compile and run, but ship with no game ROMs are not > covered by this rule. > > * Emulators must not ship with any ROM files (e.g. games) unless those > ROM files are available under a Fedora permissible license and have been > built from source code in the Fedora buildsystem. > > * Emulators must not point to any third-party sites which provide > firmware or ROM files that are distributed without the clear and > explicit permission of their copyright holders.
Does this mean that, if we strip FreeDOS out of dosemu / dosemu2, we can ship it and even point to a website with FreeDOS binaries? AIUI the only problem with FreeDOS is that no one knows how to compile it with a free software toolchain. As far as I know, the binary is pretty clearly redistributable. (Hmm. Could FreeDOS ship as a firmware blob? That seems dubious to me.) --Andy
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